Optimal retirement income tontines
Moshe A. Milevsky, Thomas S. Salisbury

TL;DR
This paper derives the optimal structure for retirement income tontines, showing they can be nearly as beneficial as life annuities and revitalizing interest in this historically neglected financial product.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical framework for designing optimal tontines that maximize lifetime utility, considering factors like pool size and individual risk aversion.
Findings
Optimal tontine structure derived using Euler-Lagrange equation.
Lorenzo de Tonti's structure is optimal as risk aversion approaches infinity.
Optimal tontines are nearly as utility-efficient as loaded life annuities.
Abstract
Tontines were once a popular type of mortality-linked investment pool. They promised enormous rewards to the last survivors at the expense of those died early. And, while this design appealed to the gambling instinc}, it is a suboptimal way to generate retirement income. Indeed, actuarially-fair life annuities making constant payments -- where the insurance company is exposed to longevity risk -- induce greater lifetime utility. However, tontines do not have to be structured the historical way, i.e. with a constant cash flow shared amongst a shrinking group of survivors. Moreover, insurance companies do not sell actuarially-fair life annuities, in part due to aggregate longevity risk. We derive the tontine structure that maximizes lifetime utility. Technically speaking we solve the Euler-Lagrange equation and examine its sensitivity to (i.) the size of the tontine pool , and (ii.)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInsurance, Mortality, Demography, Risk Management · Financial Literacy, Pension, Retirement Analysis · Economic theories and models
